Tie: What was the Love Story?
The Art of Wearing a Tie, 1827. It would seem that the origins of this item of men’s equipment should be traced back to Germany since the word itself comes from the German halstuch, which means “neck scarf.” But this sovereign reformer of ours was Peter the First, who established relations with other things as a sign of a civilized appearance. The history of this plantation was difficult and sometimes arduous.
The emperor was even forced to issue rules for the use of the tie, which stated that “it is not like tying a tie and it is not ordered to blow your nose.” Since then, the nickname “toilet” has been invented by forcibly introducing expressive names such as “nose,” “islet,” “snake.”
However, modern relations actually come from Neckarchief. The oldest of them – found by archaeologists – dates back to the third century BC. And they were found in China. The next step in the history of the tie dates back to the time of the Roman Empire: the footmen clasped around the neck of the player’s armor. Its memory is immortalized in the Trojan columns, built-in Rome in 113 AD, where the head of the Focalis was carved with a knot in a marble portrait of a warrior.
With the fall of Rome, the image of the Legionnaires seemed to have faded from the memory of the Europeans… but no, it seems! First, the Romans inherited this inheritance. During the Thirty Years’ War, Croatian cavalry units were part of the army that arrived in Paris to support the French crown. The rhetoric aroused the interest of the French. These scarves were decorated with small and large tassels, the edges of which were tied with a rosette hanging from the chest.
Whether in a palace reception or in a military parade to win a battle, these unusual items caught the attention of Louis IV, and the Sun King, a well-known jeweler, sought a new path for it. He seemed to immediately instruct Franোois Michel Le Taller, Marquis de Louis, to take a few naps during the day (this is your choice!). Subsequently, His Majesty even started a special “tie” position with related responsibilities.
In France, the tie was called a cravet, and there is a curious legend: the French asked the Croats this question on their necks: “What is this?” And those who believed that they were interested in them replied: “Harbhath.” And then Cravet moved to another language. In Paris, the infamous beauty Lucy de Lavalia added a new touch to “tie history.” As one of the king’s favorites, he loved to walk around a fashionable toilet with his own hands and once thought of trying it in the shape of a butterfly. The way to know was called “Lavalier’s” bow and was found to be tough in time: a bow tie exists in fashion today. Then there was the “unforgettable” shawl, an intricate structure, with tangled knots pulling the neck towards the very chin. The British called them “napkin fashion,”
These are the stars, the British, who opened a new page in the evolution of the tie and neatly filled it with a change in the style of men’s shirts. In the third last year of the nineteenth century, with the spread of turn-down collars came a long colorful tie fashion, “regata” or “four-handed-hand” (sound of four-horse control) and then “plastron” – a scarf tied around the neck. , And was attached to the chest with a knot and pierced with a pin.
Finally, in 1924, a heavy word of fashion came across the sea. So it is still sewn.